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Presentation on International Humanitarian Law and the Geneva Conventions

Presentation on International Humanitarian Law and the Geneva Conventions. www.AssignmentPoint.com. International Humanitarian Law and the Geneva Conventions. IHL. Treaties regulate the conduct of hostilities. DoD policy to adhere to these treaties. IHL.

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Presentation on International Humanitarian Law and the Geneva Conventions

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  1. Presentation onInternational Humanitarian Law and the Geneva Conventions www.AssignmentPoint.com www.assignmentpoint.com

  2. International Humanitarian Law and the Geneva Conventions www.assignmentpoint.com

  3. www.assignmentpoint.com

  4. IHL • Treaties regulate the conduct of hostilities. • DoD policy to adhere to these treaties. www.assignmentpoint.com

  5. IHL • Protects people who are not or are no longer participating in hostilities. • Purpose- limit and prevent human suffering. www.assignmentpoint.com

  6. What kind of human rights are commonly violated in armed conflicts? www.assignmentpoint.com

  7. IHL • Observed by governments and their armed forces. • Geneva Conventions establish humanitarian protections. www.assignmentpoint.com

  8. IHL • Protects people not taking part in the fighting - civilians - medics - chaplains - humanitarian aid workers www.assignmentpoint.com

  9. Protects people who can no longer fight: - wounded or sick soldiers - prisoners of war www.assignmentpoint.com

  10. Civilians and civilian property may not be the subject of a military attack. www.assignmentpoint.com

  11. Soldiers who have ceased to fight because of illness or injury are to be protected. www.assignmentpoint.com

  12. Prisoners of War • Captors must respect (not attack) and protect (care for) those who surrender. www.assignmentpoint.com

  13. Chaplains and assistants are protected. www.assignmentpoint.com

  14. Medical Personnel • All AMEDD personnel assigned to AMEDD duties are protected. • Two types of protection: • Protection from attack • Protection upon capture www.assignmentpoint.com

  15. Are support people who do not directly treat casualties in a protected status? www.assignmentpoint.com

  16. Protection from Attack • Medical personnel are noncombatants. • May lose protective status if performing duties that are “harmful to the enemy.” www.assignmentpoint.com

  17. Can medical people do anything other than treat patients? www.assignmentpoint.com

  18. Protection Upon Capture • If captured, medical personnel are “retained personnel”, not POWs. - Can only be required to perform medical duties www.assignmentpoint.com

  19. Protection Upon Capture • If captured, medical personnel are “retained personnel”, not POWs. - Must receive all benefits that POWs receive. - Retained only as long as needed to care for wounded. www.assignmentpoint.com

  20. Protected Medical Facilities and Transports • All U.S. medical facilities/transports display the emblem of the Geneva conventions. • Emblems authorized are the “Red Cross” and the “Red Crescent.” www.assignmentpoint.com

  21. What if we deploy to a country that doesn’t allow or recognize “Christian” symbols? www.assignmentpoint.com

  22. Medical establishments may not be intentionally attacked. • Medical supplies are not intentionally destroyed. www.assignmentpoint.com

  23. Do not place medical facilities near military objectives, if at all possible. www.assignmentpoint.com

  24. Protected medical transports include: - ambulances - medical ships - medical aircraft www.assignmentpoint.com

  25. Can a commander order the removal of the Red Cross and still use the vehicle for medical purposes? www.assignmentpoint.com

  26. Can a commander use an ambulance for a nonmedical purpose?What about convoys? Are ambulances still protected? www.assignmentpoint.com

  27. Medical Aircraft • Must be clearly marked. • Flights over enemy territory are prohibited. • Must obey summons to land. www.assignmentpoint.com

  28. Understanding Self-Defense • Medical personnel are entitled to defend themselves and their patients. • Small defensive arms are permitted. www.assignmentpoint.com

  29. What happens if medical personnel use these defensive weapons to fire at enemy soldiers? www.assignmentpoint.com

  30. Use of or mounting of offensive weapons on dedicated medical evacuation vehicles jeopardizes the Geneva protection. www.assignmentpoint.com

  31. Treating and Guarding Detainees • Refers to any person captured or detainees by an armed force. www.assignmentpoint.com

  32. Detainee Categories • Enemy Prisoner of War (EPW) • Civilian Internee (CI) • Retained Person (RP) • Other Detainees (OD) • Enemy Combatant (EC) www.assignmentpoint.com

  33. Treating and Guarding Detainees • We are required to afford certain rights to all detainees. www.assignmentpoint.com

  34. Why should we care about the welfare of the enemy? www.assignmentpoint.com

  35. Always treat a captured person as a POW initially. • 5 Ss: • Search • Segregate • Silence • Safeguard • Speed www.assignmentpoint.com

  36. Medical standard of care for detainees is the same as for U.S. Forces. • Priority based on severity of injury - not the uniform. www.assignmentpoint.com

  37. Detainees will not be left without medical care. www.assignmentpoint.com

  38. Initial Actions Upon Capture • Non-injured detainees will be evacuated as quickly as possible. • Sick and wounded detainees will be evacuated separately. www.assignmentpoint.com

  39. Actions Upon Capture-Cavity Searches • Body cavity searches performed for valid medical reasons- not part of routine intake PE. • Cavity searches conducted only if there is a reasonable belief detainee is concealing items. • Conducted by same gender, if possible. www.assignmentpoint.com

  40. Evacuation/Care of Detainees • Units will categorize sick and wounded detainees as walking or non-walking wounded. • Delivered to nearest medical facility. www.assignmentpoint.com

  41. Medical Care for Detainees • Detainees will not be denied medical care. www.assignmentpoint.com

  42. Medical Care for Detainees- Inprocessing • Screening medical examination. • Medical record created during in-process. • Facility will provide Geneva Conventions in detainee language. www.assignmentpoint.com

  43. Care for Detainees - Outpatient • Daily sick call - cared for separately. • Military bearing maintained. www.assignmentpoint.com

  44. Care for Detainees - Outpatient • Medical Support includes: • First Aid • Preventive Medicine • Medical Services • Coordinate Medical EPWs, CI and RP www.assignmentpoint.com

  45. Care for Detainees • Every camp will have a clinic. • Detainees can be isolated. • Immunizations given. • Serious illness/surgery. • Rehabilitation. www.assignmentpoint.com

  46. Medical Care for Detainees • Medical records kept at every level. • Copies sent to ICRC. • Monthly medical inspections. • Periodic sanitary inspections. www.assignmentpoint.com

  47. Medical Care for Detainees • Detainees will NOT be handcuffed or tied. • Exceptions: medical restraint or to ensure safe custody. www.assignmentpoint.com

  48. Detainees • Inhumane treatment is prohibited • Protect against all violence www.assignmentpoint.com

  49. Transporting Detainees • Provide sufficient: • Food • Water • Clothing • Shelter • Medical attention www.assignmentpoint.com

  50. Medical personnel do not guard detainee patients. www.assignmentpoint.com

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